4.7 Article

Acoustic focusing of beads and cells in hydrogel droplets

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-86985-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Uppsala University - Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation [WAF 2016.0112]
  2. European Research Council [ERC-2017-STG-757444]

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This study presents a microfluidic system using bulk acoustic standing waves to control the position of particles in hydrogel droplets, demonstrating high precision in particle positioning. The technology has been successfully applied to precisely control the spatial position of biological particles in hydrogel droplets, opening up possibilities for the generation of more complex biological hydrogel structures.
The generation of hydrogel droplets using droplet microfluidics has emerged as a powerful tool with many applications in biology and medicine. Here, a microfluidic system to control the position of particles (beads or astrocyte cells) in hydrogel droplets using bulk acoustic standing waves is presented. The chip consisted of a droplet generator and a 380 mu m wide acoustic focusing channel. Droplets comprising hydrogel precursor solution (polyethylene glycol tetraacrylate or a combination of polyethylene glycol tetraacrylate and gelatine methacrylate), photoinitiator and particles were generated. The droplets passed along the acoustic focusing channel where a half wavelength acoustic standing wave field was generated, and the particles were focused to the centre line of the droplets (i.e. the pressure nodal line) by the acoustic force. The droplets were cross-linked by exposure to UV-light, freezing the particles in their positions. With the acoustics applied, 89 +/- 19% of the particles (polystyrene beads, 10 mu m diameter) were positioned in an area +/- 10% from the centre line. As proof-of-principle for biological particles, astrocytes were focused in hydrogel droplets using the same principle. The viability of the astrocytes after 7 days in culture was 72 +/- 22% when exposed to the acoustic focusing compared with 70 +/- 19% for samples not exposed to the acoustic focusing. This technology provides a platform to control the spatial position of bioparticles in hydrogel droplets, and opens up for the generation of more complex biological hydrogel structures.

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